Names
in sentence
1313 examples of Names in a sentence
The original designer of the memorial, Michael Arad, had this image in his mind of all the
names
appearing undifferentiated, almost random, really a poetic reflection on top of the nature of a terrorism event itself, but it was a huge challenge for the families, for the foundation, certainly for the first responders, and there was a negotiation that went forth and a solution was found to actually create not an order in terms of chronology, or in terms of alphabetical, but through what's called meaningful adjacency.
So these are groupings of the
names
themselves which appear undifferentiated but actually have an order, and we, along with Jer Thorp, created an algorithm to take massive amounts of data to actually start to connect together all these different
names
themselves.
So this is an image of the actual algorithm itself with the
names
scrambled for privacy, but you can see that these blocks of color are actually the four different flights, the two different towers, the first responders, and you can actually see within that different floors, and then the green lines are the interpersonal connections that were requested by the families themselves.
You can see the way that the geography of the event is reflected inside of the memorial, and you can search for an individual name, or in this case an employer, Cantor Fitzgerald, and see the way in which all of those names, those hundreds of names, are actually organized onto the memorial itself, and use that to navigate the memorial.
You can see the relationships between the different
names
themselves.
So suddenly what is this undifferentiated, anonymous group of
names
springs into reality as an individual life.
And I should mention as well that some of you do use your names, "James Lyne's iPhone," for example.
Think of some great names: the Place de la Bastille, Zuccotti Park, Tahrir Square, Taksim Square in today's headlines in Istanbul, or, yes, Tiananmen Square in Beijing.
They have strange names: UCLG, United Cities and Local Governments; ICLEI, the International Council for Local Environmental Issues.
What do you do?" and I say "I study memory," they usually want to tell me how they have trouble remembering names, or they've got a relative who's got Alzheimer's or some kind of memory problem, but I have to tell them I don't study when people forget.
Therefore, you Google their
names
and in a certain universe, you find this information.
I looked at them, we went around and introduced ourselves, and they all said their
names
and where they're from, and I said, I'm Sheryl Sandberg, and this was my dream.
My mom taught me how to sew, and on my back porch, I would sit and make little headbands out of ribbon, and I would write down the
names
and the price of each item.
ES: So, I've got to give credit to the NSA for using appropriate
names
on this.
And the reason was that I have never, never seen the
names
of my sisters written on any document.
And it took over a decade to clear their
names.
And so the idea that there are questions that I've never seen that my people are going to answer, and some of these characters have been with me for ages, some of them don't even have names, I don't know what's going to happen.
One of the first things I wrote was just a list of
names
of people I'd known, and they become characters in a kind of three-dimensional drama, where they explain who they are, what they do, their hopes and their fears for the future.
I want to live in a world where we don't have such low expectations of disabled people that we are congratulated for getting out of bed and remembering our own
names
in the morning.
They have been called many
names
from criminals to terrorists, and I cannot justify their illegal means, but the ideas they fight for are ones that matter to us all.
And I won't name names, but you know who you are.
If you look in the front matter of American Heritage Dictionaries, you can actually find the
names
of the people on the Usage Panel.
Now, if that's one goal, the other goal is to look to the future and think about what kind of new musical things can we make that we don't perhaps yet have
names
for that's enabled by technology, but ultimately might change the way that humans make music.
This is "G.I.R." from Texas, "R.I.K." I don't know why it's these three-letter
names
today, Los Angeles.
She
names
the twins after the camp's commanders to gain their favor, and feeds them with black tea because her milk cannot sustain them.
But with people's names, you can't change them.
I mean, really, same example: if you don't like politicians calling each other names, stop clicking on the stories about what one guy in one party called the other guy in the other party.
They wanted to project themselves in a way that they wanted to be perceived, so that the way they looked and the
names
that they gave themselves defined them.
Forget the big
names.
Their conversations were about what their family was going to be like, what their kids
' names
would be, how their life would be when they left the guerrilla.
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